Similiar to that perennial yet irritating 60s chestnut ‘ Take a Load Off Fanny‘, you can either live with it, or you can’t. To my ears ‘Heart’ loses melody and purpose at this point, and Ferry’s version does little to change the outcome. Suddenly ‘Piece’ shifts from imploring sweetness – which suits Ferry’s delivery to a tee – to brokenhearted antagonism, a style better suited to Joplin’s in-your-face Texas blues, and a reason surely why Joplin’s version is the standard for the song and not Erma Franklin’s more sombre (even glum), take. From here though, the success of Ferry’s recording really depends on how you feel about the song, for the upcoming shift in mood relies on the sudden call-to-arms of the jilted lover, an approach most successfully realized by Janis Joplin’s raspy and impatient ‘ Co-o-ome on, come on, COME ON, co-o-o-ome on and TAKE IT !/ Take another little piece of my heart now, baby‘. Ranking as some of the best phrasing of his career to date, Ferry’s vocal is so considered and melodic in these opening lines that you, the cruel lover, cannot doubt the sincerity of the question being asked regarding actions towards the tender and broken heart. Certainly, the opening line of ‘Piece of My Heart’ is stunning in its affectation as Ferry allows himself to be close-miked and vulnerable (hear the echo of the studio standing between him and the words):ĭidn’t I make you feel ( pause) like youuuu ( hold) are the on-ly ( hold) one ( hold) ? So much for originality in pop in 1969!).įerry does a surprisingly excellent version of ‘Piece of My Heart’ on his first covers album These Foolish Things – surprising in that, negating the quirks of his quavering vocal style, he sweetens his voice to a degree that releases him from the narrow vocal canvas of Roxy Music and points the way towards the fuller sound heard on Stranded and 1974’s solo hit ‘Smoke Gets in Your Eyes’. By the time Sammy Hagar covered ‘Piece of My Heart’ in 1981, the legacy of Erma, Dusty and Janis were calling for a moratorium on men covering the song (Marmalade fared better their mega #1 hit cover of The Beatles Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da. Taking on a woman’s song can never be easy, especially when one version – Joplin’s – is probably the defining track of a short career – but Ferry may have felt he could deliver a more soulful version than the throw-away delivered by Scottish all-male group Marmalade in 1968 (he could, and he did). Piece of My Heart Big Brother & The Holding Company (cover, Cheap Thrills, 1968)īert Berns – one of the greatest songwriters of all bloody time, it’s as simple as that!īy the time Bryan Ferry recorded Jerry Ragovoy and Bert Berns’ ‘Piece of My Heart’ in 1973 the song was already a classic – producing hits for Erma Franklin (Aretha’s sister), Dusty Springfield and Janis Joplin. Piece of My Heart Erma Franklin (original, written by Jerry Ragovoy/Bert Berns, 1967) Piece of My Heart Bryan Ferry (cover version, These Foolish Things, 1973)
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